You are Competing with Your Classmates for Good Grades and Good Ideas
Writing and editing advice from [http://www.goodtermpaper.com]
So in your paper, you are basically the god. But are a god venturing out into unfamiliar terrain, where information will attack you, appeal to you, seduce you, betray you and leave you for dead (well, maybe that's a tad extreme, but you could get an F). That is because the information itself is sentient, alive, and strongly related to other pieces of information in its environment. Today, Hilary Rodham and Barack Obama stories contest, wrestle with, hunt and stalk one another on the seething digital saranghetti. It is every term paper god or sound byte for itself, as river access (real, substantial, truth telling, grounded and informative journalism) is at a dear, vanishing premium.
Now it is not really all that bad. Your teacher is aware of the environmental perils that await your god like expansion into knowledge, and everyone in your class is competing in the same plane.
And just to be clear, you are competing. Depending on your professor's pedigree, length of tenure, temperament and 'office political climate' of his or her department, your teacher will grade the students along a predetermined scale. Now to be sure, the actual quality of the class in general will be taken into account, but past history and the above factors will have created some grading habits in your prof's mind. They are human too, as you probably have realized by now (unless you subscribe to the killer robot theory).
So you are competing with your classmates, each of your trying to pull unique, substantial and creative interpretations of information out of pretty much the same resources, and sometimes for the exact same assignment. If you have a term paper or some freedom to choose- that is better in some ways, worse in others.
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